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“Nope! He might be abducted by aliens tomorrow.” It’s easy to smile at Yoshitake’s square-headed characters and endless stream of lighthearted thought experiments in this gently goofy book, which offers a hopeful corrective to grown-up pessimism. “Will I have to put up with that bully forever?” she wonders. Maybe, in the future, “someone always catches the strawberry you drop” (a robot skids under the table, bowl outstretched), or “your room has a zero-gravity switch” (brother and sister bob gleefully in mid-air). “Grown-ups act like they can predict the future,” she says, but it’s never limited to one or two choices: “There must be more than that!” These words are all the encouragement the girl needs to visualize possibilities. “By the time we grow up, things are going to be terrible.” The girl’s grandmother, however, counsels cool-headedness. “Our future is doomed,” an older brother growls to his little sister one rainy day. In an era specializing in dark predictions, Yoshitake ( I Can Be Anything) gives young readers a new way of thinking about what’s to come. Still Stuck book by Shinsuke Yoshitake ReadingRewards: Earn 2x points on all Childrens Books Dumping Debt Rated: G (General Audience) No Customer Reviews Select Format Hardcover 4.49 - 12.42 Select Condition Like New Unavailable Very Good 5.29 Good 4.69 Acceptable 4.49 New 12.42 See All 3 Editions from 4. While Melissa and Bobbi flirt with each other openly, Nick and Frances embark on an intense secret affair that is surprising to them both. Bobbi and Frances start to spend time with Melissa and her husband, Nick, a handsome but reserved actor. It’s at one of their shows that they meet Melissa, an older writer, who is fascinated by the pair. Though they broke up three years ago, Frances and Bobbi are virtually inseparable and perform spoken word poetry together in Dublin. Her ex-girlfriend, now best friend, Bobbi is self-assured, outspoken and compelling. Frances is observant, cerebral and sharp. “Conversations with Friends” follows Frances, a 21 year old college student, as she navigates a series of relationships that force her to confront her own vulnerabilities for the first time. Hainish Novels & Stories, Volumes 1 & 2, Library of America 2017. The Lathe of Heaven, Scribner’s 1971, Avon 1972, Scribner’s 2008. Very Far Away from Anywhere Else, Atheneum 1976, Bantam 1978. The Beginning Place, Harper & Row 1980, Bantam 1981. The Eye of the Heron, Harper & Row 1983, Bantam 1983. The Annals of the Western Shore:Īlways Coming Home | Music & Poetry of the Kesh (Music by Todd Barton), Harper & Row 1985, Bantam 1987, UC Press 2000 | Book View Café. *These three reissued in one volume as Worlds of Exile and Illusion, Tor 1998. Rocannon’s World*, Ace 1966, Harper & Row 1977. Planet of Exile *, Ace 1966, Harper & Row 1978. The Left Hand of Darkness, Walker 1969, Ace 1969, Harper & Row 1980.Ĭity of Illusions *, Ace 1967, Harper & Row 1978. The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia, Harper & Row 1974, Avon 1975. The Word for World Is Forest, Putnam 1976, Berkley 1976. The Telling, Harcourt 2000, Gollancz 2001. The Tombs of Atuan, Atheneum 1970, Bantam 1975.Ī Wizard of Earthsea, Parnassus/Houghton Mifflin 1968, Ace 1970, Atheneum 1991. The Farthest Shore, Atheneum 1972, Bantam 1975. |